Loren Booda
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What is the average number of intersections for two infinite curves confined to a plane?
The average number of intersections for two infinite curves confined to a plane is statistically and definitively infinity. This conclusion arises from the discussion on the nature of intersections among infinite curves, where examples such as y=sin(x) and y=0 demonstrate infinite intersections, while others like y=x and y=-x intersect once. The complexity of defining a "random curve" and the implications of infinite sets further complicate the question, leading to the assertion that the average of any non-negative set containing at least one infinity is infinity.
PREREQUISITESMathematicians, statisticians, and researchers interested in topology, geometry, and the properties of infinite sets will benefit from this discussion.
How long is a piece of string?Loren Booda said:What is the average number of intersections for two infinite curves confined to a plane?
Dragonfall said:How do you define a random curve? A random walk is discrete, but random curve?
Dragonfall said:No, when you just "choose" an element out of the set of all curves it isn't "random" in the probabilistic sense. First of all can we even define a probability measure on that set? How big is it? It might be bigger than the set of reals.
Loren Booda said:It may turn out that infinite sets cannot be averaged or proportioned, but if they can, I believe one of your answers is the correct number.
Dragonfall said:No, when you just "choose" an element out of the set of all curves it isn't "random" in the probabilistic sense. First of all can we even define a probability measure on that set? How big is it? It might be bigger than the set of reals.
Dragonfall said:The problem with the step size approach is that the limit might not be a curve, so there's no sense of talking about "intersecting" itself.
Russell Berty said:The set of all curves in R^2 is probably larger than the set of all reals. And the upper bound is the size of the set of all functions from R to R.
junglebeast said:The average of any (finite or infinite) set of numbers that are non-negative and contains at least 1 infinity is equal to infinity.